Toronto-based beauty blogger Menal Khan uploaded a photo of her “extra” eyebrows with the caption: “Felt like annoying everyone by doing something hella unnecessary with my eyebrows. I call them, the boxed brows.”

Khan first glued down her entire brow (a technique commonly used by makeup artists backstage at Fashion Week) to smooth it out. Then she used Anastasia Beverly Hills Pomade in Soft Brown to replicate the box shape and exaggerated the hair strokes with Kat Von D Beauty Liners in Mad Max Brown and Trooper. Tarte Cosmetics Shape Tape helped Khan to “carve out the shape further.”

The 25-year-old’s “boxed brows” has gained over 1,500 likes on Instagram. Followers impressed by the look wrote “Very creative love it,” “I aspire to be your level of extra lmao I loveeeee,” and “Way better than the squiggly brows!!” Khan’s makeup skills even caught the eye of beauty guru Huda Kattan , who reposted the pic on her account and racked up over 154,000 likes.

But as one woke commenter noted: “Sorry to disappoint this is definitely not new.”

Big Daddy Kane was one of the very first hip-hop artists to popularize eyebrow cuts. The sharp gaps in his brows accentuated his hi-top fade and killer cheekbones.

While Khan didn’t elaborate on the inspiration for her boxed brows or explain whether she was inspired by any of these rappers, calling it “boxed brows” is wrong. The lack of acknowledgement of any hip-hop influence could be her unawareness of where the look truly originated.

However, we can’t help but recall that time where undercut designs were culturally appropriated and redefined as “hair tattoos.” Any individual whose stepped foot inside a barbershop in a predominately black or Latino neighborhood knows that etching crisp and imaginative works of art with a pair of clippers didn’t start on Instagram or Twitter — social media simply elevates these looks beyond your neighborhood salon.

So to summarize: boxed brows aren’t new and you should refer to them as eyebrows cuts.